Mahzor

New York Public Library

Churches

Sarajevo Haggadah

Mah Nishtanah

Sarajevo haggadah

Antaea Darom

Israeli women's art

Action

Torah as music

Ben Heine

Action

ceramic bowl

Mohammad Said Kalash, "Offering Reconciliation" exhibit (photo: Ilan Amihai)

Action

Punch and Judy/Pinchas and Jamila

Avi Katz

Action

David Grossman

Ben Heine

Action

Eldrige Street shul

Lower East Side

Action

Dove

Ben Heine

Action

Two birds

Hoda Jamal

Action

Israeli and Palestinian boys

from documentary, Promises

Action

Cat in the Hat

Yiddish version

Action

Daylight through the Wall

Banksy: graffiti art on Separation Wall

Action

Maurice Sendak's Brundibar set

New Victory Theater (photo: Nan Melville/NYT)

Action

Daniel Barenboim, West-Eastern Divan Orchestra

Palestinian-Israeli musical ensemble (photo: Kerstin Joensson/AP)

Action

Great Day on Eldrige Street

N.Y.'s klezmer greats celebrate shul rededication (photo: Leo Sorel)

Action

Joint Appeal for Peace

(Avi Katz)

Joint Appeal for Peace

Ketubah, Ancona, Italy (1772)

(Jewish Theological Seminary library)

Ancona ketubah

Posts Tagged ‘sheikh jarrah’

Israeli Settler Right Bullies Rabbi Ascherman, Protesting at His Home

Tuesday, January 18th, 2011
rabbi arik ascherman

Rabbi Ascherman repairing demolished Palestinian home (Rabbis for Human Rights-Israel)

The Israeli settler far-right, as part of its campaign of vitriol and intimidation is stalking Rabbi Arik Ascherman, founder of Rabbis for Human Rights.  They will be demonstrating outside his home later today (Wednesday) against his alleged campaign to destroy Jewish sovereignty over all of historic Eretz Yisrael.  The far-right says he “sabotages the redemption of the land” (using the term m’chabayl, the root of the Hebrew word for “terrorist”).  Interestingly, the Israeli police have provided a permit for this protest, while none of Sheikh Jarrah’s weekly protests ever received one.  When you realize that the police force is staffed by the Meir Rotters of Israel, you understand why.

The Sheikh Jarrah solidarity movement has called out its followers to support and protect Rabbi Asherman’s home.  When I receive video or stills of the demo I will post them.

This is the same type of hooliganism the Israeli right has used over the years against the activist community.  They did the same to Naomi Hazan after Im Tirzu decorated her image with a rhino horn and ridiculed her as a supporter of Hamas and Israeli traitor.    And of course, the height of such incitement was in the lead up to Yizhak Rabin’s assassination when the Israeli right massed in downtown Jerusalem baying for the prime minister’s blood.  Many will remember the leading politician who, like a Roman emperor at the Coliseum, gave Rabin a thumbs down from a downtown Jerusalem balcony that night: Bibi Netanyahu.  If you want to see this accomplice to murder in action, watch this sickening video of his speech and the carnival of blood that preceded it.

This goes to a catastrophic collapse of the Israeli center over the decades.  Barak’s desertion of Labor is but the latest example.  In the face of the right’s capacity for violence and its absolute conviction in the sanctity of its cause, the center and left gave way, reminding me of the Yeats poem:

Things fall apart; the centre cannot hold;
Mere anarchy is loosed upon the world,
The blood-dimmed tide is loosed, and everywhere
The ceremony of innocence is drowned;
The best lack all conviction, while the worst
Are full of passionate intensity.

…And what rough beast, its hour come round at last,
Slouches towards Bethlehem to be born?

Rabbi Rotter’s False Claims

Monday, January 17th, 2011


rotter warning

Rabbi Rotter's warning of alleged fake Facebook profile created in the name of 'Kafe'

Within the past hour, Channel 10 Israel news aired a segment (see YouTube Hebrew video above) on our expose of Jerusalem police officer Meir Rotter’s incitement to violence against the non-violent demonstrators at Sheikh Jarrah.  In the segment, the reporter called this blog the “Wikileaks of Israel,” to which I can only reply that I’m proud to be.

Rabbi Yeshayahu Rotter is disseminating several false claims in order to protect his son, Meir, who I proved yesterday is the Rotter.net member, Kafe.  The latter posted at Rotter.net raged-filled rants against the protesters, Israeli government and media and leftists of all stripes.

First, Rotter.net posted a fictitious claim that someone had created a Facebook account for a “Kafe” who purported to be a moderator of Rotter.net.  Second, Rabbi Rotter posted a further distortion when he claimed that my goal was not to harm Meir, but him.  In reply, I should point out that my intent was to harm no one, but rather to expose dangerous violent views expressed by an Israeli policemen about citizens he was supposed to be protecting instead of assaulting.  And my goal is certainly not to harm Rabbi Rotter unless he decides to join his son in the police force and attack unarmed demonstrators.  Besides, I post at Rotter.net myself.  Why would I want to harm the forum or its owner?

In the thread they also complain that their privacy has been violated a charge that is ridiculous since Rotter, as a visible, aggressive police officer has become a public figure.  Furthermore, his public posts have made him even more so.  If I really wanted to violate their privacy I could do so much more than I have already.  I know their Israeli ID numbers, home addresses, birth dates, spouses’ names, etc.  But my goal isn’t to expose such private information.  My goal is make Meir Rotter and the Israeli police aware that there are civilized norms that the former has violated and that he will be held accountable.

Isn’t this the way of the violent Israeli settler right, though?  They commit or incite acts of violence against their Arab or Jewish enemies and then when they’re called on it they whine about how THEY are the victims of blood libels.  Remember the aftermath of the Rabin assassination when Israel looked in horror at the hatred spewed against their prime minister even before the killing?  What did the far right say then?  ”Boo-hoo, blood libel, you big bad meanies.  We’re the victims, not you.  Not Rabin.  He only lost his life. You’re destroying our reputation.”

Compare this to what Kafe and Rabbi Rotter write in the thread I linked to above.  It’s beyond pathetic.  Someone should tell them that when you vent hate you shouldn’t back away from it.  You should accept it.  Don’t collapse in self-pity.  That’s a trick designed to divert attention and throw the blame back on the real victims, in this case the Sheikh Jarrah protesters who Meir Rotter assaults with regularity and impunity every Friday in Jerusalem.

The two Rotters are engaged in a rather pathetic attempt to cover their tracks and make themselves out to the victims in this farce of Meir’s own making.  They’re clearly trying to sweep up the mess left from Meir, who took the “Kafe” name as a forum member and who uses ‘kafe1@netvision.net.il” as an e-mail address, which exposed his identity.  Interestingly, “Kafe’s” member profile at Rotter.net is marked “secret.”  Why would he need to use such a designation unless he was attempting to conceal his real identity from fellow forum members?  If Kafe is not Meir Rotter then they can prove this by providing a screenshot or link to Kafe’s real member profile along with a date on the page to show that it was retrieved on a date before yesterday, when I exposed the connection between the two.  If they do not provide this date, then it would be far too simple for them to change Kafe’s personal data now to make it look like there is no connection.

Meir Rotter is quoted lying in the Channel 10 interview as saying: “Why would I need to post in the forum?  Anything I have to say can be said by the police spokesperson[ on my behalf].  I’m a policeman, that’s all.”  The Israeli police themselves reacted angrily, according to the reporter, saying they would not respond to the charges and that this was an attempt to smear one of their own.  Can you imagine how the formal complaint against Rotter registered with the police by the protesters will be handled?

At least Rotter will know that the world will be watching his behavior.  If he behaves in the manner he advocates at Rotter.net, he will be held accountable–if not by the police as he should, at least by this blog and the “anti-Zionist, post-Israeli” Israeli media.

Rabbi Rotter’s Son, Undercover Jerusalem Police Officer, Incites Violence Against Sheikh Jarrah Protesters

Sunday, January 16th, 2011
meir rotter

Meir Rotter, undercover police officer publicly advocates violence against Sheikh Jarrah protestors

For those not steeped in Israeli culture, there is an online forum called Rotter that plays a unique role in certain segments of Israeli society.  It’s a cross between FoxNews, Matt Drudge, DebkaFiles and NewsMax.  It is a wildly popular internet forum (Alexa ranks it 83rd in Israel) that deals in everything from celebrity gossip to political scoops and intelligence matters, all with a far-right political focus.  It’s especially known for its brand of vituperative, scabrous political debate, sorta like the Jerusalem Post talkbacks on steroids.  I’m routinely called “Terrorist” there as if it were my first name, which I wear of course as a badge of courage.

meir rotter leads west bank hike

Meir Rotter (note blue knitted skullcap) leading West Bank hike

Rotter.net was founded in 1999 by Rabbi Yeshayahu Rotter, who now runs the site with at least a few of his children helping administer and moderate it.  Meir Rotter, 37, married and the father of two, is Yeshayahu’s son and serves as a police officer in Jerusalem.  In a Wikipedia discussion, his sister Tamar confirms that her brother is a police officer.

He is a fixture at the weekly Sheikh Jarrah demonstrations where he’s been assigned for the past six months.  You can see him “in action” toward the end of this Sheikh Jarrah video in which he steals a Palestinian flag from the hands of an Israeli demonstrator.  He’s known to be a particularly nasty, odious presence wearing his enormous blue settler-style skullcap, wraparound sunglasses, and a pistol strapped to his waist (see picture).  Since he never wears a police uniform at the protests, he would appear to be a plain clothes officer.  Frankly, I can’t quite figure out why he’d be there in plain clothes dressed as a settler.  He wouldn’t be fooling anyone.

Most of this could be figured out pretty easily using public and online records.  But what is hitherto unknown is that an Israeli source tells me that Meir Rotter is not only an administrator of Rotter, but a member who posts under the name Kafe, some of the most offensive material inciting violence against the Sheikh Jarrah demonstrators.  He routinely calls them “leftist fascist, anti-Zionist, post-Israeli.”  That Meir Rotter is a police officer isn’t news.  That a Rotter administrator posts material advocating violence against lawful Israeli citizens isn’t news either.  But the fact that a police officer paid by the Jerusalem municipality ostensibly to enforce the law and keep the peace speaks of knives and axes as “legitimate means of  protest” should open a few eyes somewhere.

It certainly won’t open the eyes of Doron Zahavi, the former IDF torturer of Mustafa Dirani, who is the now the Jerusalem police “liaison” to the East Jerusalem Arab community.  Undoubtedly, Zahavi and Rotter work together, perhaps in the same unit.  Perhaps Zahavi is teaching Rotter a thing or two about torturing Arabs, just as the former’s subordinates sodomized Dirani in an Israeli prison several years ago.

There is compelling evidence to support the claim that Kafe and Rotter fils are one and the same person.  First, Kafe was one of the earliest members to sign up for the forum (on October 21, 2001) just after it was revamped in the format it presently has.  Second, for the past seven months many of his posts deal with the Sheikh Jarrah protests and police affairs related to them.  In particular, they often deal with intelligence about either the Israeli protestors or the East Jerusalem Arab community.  This is intelligence that would only be available or even interesting to either a police officer or a Shabak agent.

The image above on the right is from one of the hikes Rotter leads in the West Bank for his religious-nationalist acolytes.  Here one of the participants names Rotter and refers to pictures that he took on one of these hikes.  Another gallery on the same Picasa account displays images of Rotter himself (see right-hand image above) leading the hikes.

There is another stylistic element of Rotter’s writing that nails his identity as Kafe.  In Wikipedia, he writes (in Hebrew) under his own name:

Often the number in Shomron reaches into the hundreds! of hikers.

In Rotter, he writes as Kafe:

Every day, my dear friend receives free, at no cost! these two newspapers at the doorstep of his home.

meir rotter violent post

Meir Rotter advocates spraying Sheikh Jarrah protesters with yellow paint

I’d say it’s a pretty rare thing for two different people to place exclamation marks in the middle of sentences as Rotter has done here.  Using brackets [!] would not be unusual, but unbracketed is highly so.

I think the State might take an interest that one of its police officers is writing material like the following.  Keep in mind that these are entirely non-violent demonstrations at which the only violence comes from the side of the police:

We should bring some yellow spray paint and spray the rioting anarchists and their band of left-wing fascists who join and even lead them.  With the slogan: “Paint the traitors yellow [the color of cowardice], we’ll tar and feather ‘em for the traitors against their people and terrorists against the state that they are.

Since axes, knives and clubs are a legitimate form of protest, spray paint will be my favorite weapon.

meir rotter violent post

Meir Rotter's forum post advocating rock-throwing and damaging vehicles of Sheikh Jarrah protesters

Or that he here advocates stoning protestors and vandalizing their property.  Keep in mind that there is never any violence of any kind at the Friday Sheikh Jarrah protest except that perpetrated by the police against the protesters:

The anarchists view it as suitable to express their protests using massive stones thrown at vehicles, homes and people [in Sheikh Jarrah], why should we not wait for them at the exit of the village and take the same form of protest to them and their vehicles.  Why wouldn’t they think that legitimate?

At last Friday’s Sheikh Jarrah protest, my source reveals that Officer Rotter “brutally assaulted” three demonstrators.  It sounds like he’s a very loose cannon prone to do some serious and personal damage if not reined in.

Here (Hebrew original) our favorite officer of the law even lumps the policies of the Israeli government with those of the “anarchists” and radical Islamists:

Not all is rosy in East Jerusalem.  The policy of the Israeli government itself, along with the activism of the leftist-fascist-anarchists in the eastern part of the city, and including the unceasing attempts by the PA and/or the Islamic Movement –they all cause severe harm to the control of the State of Israel over Jerusalem.  The topic of what the Arabs really want [to destroy Israel] is never broached in  Israeli [political] discussion.

Kafe advocates an iron hand against the Palestinian community.  He suggests that protests must be isolated to the Arab villages and not be allowed to spread to the streets of the city.  His ultimate goal is that the Jewish residents of the city never even hear about the protests in their own city except in the media.  The price, if there is any, will be paid by the Arabs themselves who will harm, or so he claims, only themselves and not the city’s Jewish residents.

Rotter seems obsessed with the notion that the protests might spread outside East Jerusalem and infect Jewish neighborhoods.  That would be, in his fervid imagination, making the mistake that any government makes when faced with civil unrest and chaotic conditions.  If you engage even a moment’s doubt and fail to use every means at your disposal to violently clamp down, you will find the bastards running down your own street committing acts of hooliganism and God knows what to Jews.  Before you know it you’ll have anarchy and Arabs taking over the country.

Rotter/Kafe is contemptuous of the gutless Israeli media (Hebrew original):

Once again, the Israeli media in its true ugliness and degradation

It’s no secret that the Israeli media, by and large, is precisely like the UN, hypocrites, anti-Zionist, post-Israeli.  A megaphone and platform for the extreme leftist-anarchist agenda.  Yes, yes, they’ll deny it and say that anyone making such a claim is a fascist, someone who suppresses democratic rights and shuts people up.  They say that their role must be to expose and question and all sorts of bullshit coming from their demagogic lips.

In a survey of media coverage of Sheikh Jarrah we find not just hypocritical lies and falsification of facts, because the tendency in such coverage is toward a post-Israel, anti-Zionist, racist ideology which negates the rights of Jews to the Land of Israel

In a later portion of the same post, he brags that he persuaded a good friend to cancel the two subscriptions to Israeli daily newspapers which he had.  One was to Haaretz.  He didn’t specify the name of the other but it would either be Maariv or Yediot Achronot.  It is an indication of just how radical his political views are that he cast scorn even on these two dailies known for their right-of-center reporting.

UPDATE: Earlier today, Meir Rotter posted a reply to this post at an Israeli police officer’s online forum in which he acknowledged that he is an officer assigned to Sheikh Jarrah and that he is Rabbi Rotter’s son.  He denies that he is a moderator of the Rotter forum (because his father won’t pay him!).  But he specifically does not either mention or deny the most important claim of my source, that he is the Rotter member, Kafe.  There is a principle in the law: “silence is assent.”  It applies here.

I’m afraid my source may’ve passed this information on to me because s/he was afraid that if it was revealed in Israel alone Meir Rotter might receive a promotion, instead of being disciplined.  At least, if a foreign media source reports the matter, it may be treated as more than a curiosity.

It will surprise no one that the Jerusalem police force harbors in its midst violent radical settler thugs.  But it may surprise Israelis that such individuals will express their venom, hate and rage in such a public setting.  A question for the police superintendent to ponder: is he comfortable with his officers publicly advocating violence against peacefully, legally protesting Israeli citizens?  Is that the standard of law his personnel uphold?

Not Since Rome Ruled Have They Destroyed Sukkah in Jerusalem; Palestinian Baby Suffocates on Tear Gas

Friday, September 24th, 2010

UPDATE: Maan reports (and 972 live-blogs the riots–can you even do such a thing?) that in ongoing clashes throughout East Jerusalem between Palestinian residents and 3,000 Israel police, a 14 month-old baby was smothered by tear gas shot into its home.  Israel’s police PR flack had the chutzpah to say the following:

Israeli police spokesman Micky Rosenfeld said he had not received any reports of injuries and that police were using minimum force to respond to incidents in Al-Isawiya, Silwan and Ras Al-Amoud.

For this baby, unfortunately minimal force was lethal.  Do the police care?  One wonders how or if this will impact the ersatz Israel-Palestine peace talks being stage-managed by the U.S.  How many dead will it take before someone recognizes that a faux settlement freeze is not enough to secure peace?

I just read a Maan headline:

Israel to PLO: Any new settlement projects will be `limited in scope`

Reassuring indeed.  And the suffering continues…

David Shulman filed one of his typically profound, humane and deeply moving pieces about the suffering inflicted by Israeli Occupation on Palestinian and Jew alike.  There is unfortunately no Nobel Prize for literature of peace.  But when there is, Shulman deserves it hands down.  Though his story has been published elsewhere I don’t have the heart to select the best bits and excerpt them for you. So let David speak in his own powerful words.

This week is Sukkot, the Festival of Booths, which marks the wandering of the Israelites in the Sinai desert after they left Egypt and on their way to Israel and freedom. The lived in makeshift huts made from natural vegetation and open to the elements. This ephemeral nature of the habitation reminds us of the fragile state of human existence.  This is also a holiday that revolves around family and friends with whom we eat and even sleep in the Sukkah.

Shulman describes the wonderful project devised by a Palestinian friend of building a Sukkah in Sheikh Jarrah, a Palestinian neighborhood.  Extraordinary to think that given the violence and dispossession these families have suffered at the hands of the Israeli government that they would welcome the celebration of a Jewish holiday in their midst.

I read on the Facebook Wall of an Israeli peace activist that “not since Rome has a conqueror destroyed a Sukkah.”  Not a historically verifiable fact.  But a powerful thought nonetheless.  Imagine the hillul of a State that considers itself Jewish destroying not once, but three separate times, a halachically kosher sukkah.  Are these people Jews or hooligans?  This alone is proof that religion is not the heart of the problem between Israelis and Palestinians.  Israel uses religion as part of its ongoing battle to justify the unjustifiable, the Occupation.  If religion mattered a whit to these people they wouldn’t have desecrated that sukkah.

Ah yes, they will say that a sukkah built by leftists, even if Jewish, with the help of Palestinians–what is that?  That can’t be a Jewish.  It’s a monstrous hybrid deserving of destruction.  The only thing that is monstrous is this Occupation regime and the mockery it makes of its own religion.  The real heart of this conflict is politics, power and land.  Religion is a very distant fourth, if that.

Let David tell the rest:

September 22, 2010 Sheikh Jarrah, Succot

It may sound unlikely, but we’re in ‘Uthman ibn ‘Affan Street in Sheikh Jarrah and, together with Salah and other Palestinian friends from the neighborhood, we’re building a succah. The Succot holiday, my favorite, starts tonight. Religious Jews build little booths covered with palm fronds and eat and sleep in them for seven nights, a memory of the forty years of wandering in the desert and a reminder of the precariousness of all that exists, all that we value and love. You’re supposed to be able to see the stars through the fronds that provide a make-shift roof; honored guests, beginning with the Patriarchs and ending on day seven with King David, are invited to visit each day.

But why build one in Sheikh Jarrah, in the street where the al-Ghazi and al-Kurd houses have been taken over by Israeli settlers and the Palestinian owners driven out? Mr. Al-Kurd, dignified and calm as always, is watching over the construction. New and surprising forms of Palestinian-Israeli friendship have sprung up in this neighborhood in the course of the ongoing struggle, with its weekly demonstrations—often violently suppressed by the police (over a hundred demonstrators have been arrested during the last eight or nine months). The demonstrations are usually on Friday afternoon, but last week’s was cancelled because of Yom Kippur. Two nights before the fast, however, there was a joint prayer session in Sheikh Jarrah, and the exquisite texts of the Selichot—supplications for forgiveness—were read out together, in Arabic and Hebrew, by the activists and the evicted families, standing on this same tortured street, with the settlers jeering at them. I heard that many of our people had tears in their eyes.

There’s no question that the Jews have a lot to ask forgiveness for. There’s something shocking to me, still, in the High Holiday time in Israel. I live in a mixed neighborhood that has, over the years, like most neighborhoods in Jerusalem, becoming increasingly right-wing. Many of my neighbors are religious and, of course, strident nationalists, and some of them are even what I would call soft-core racists. They find it convenient to hate Palestinians, or Arabs in general, and they feel no compunction whatsoever about the Israeli settlement project and the ongoing theft of Palestinian land, on the West Bank and in East Jerusalem, proceeding apace day by day. So how is it, I ask myself—you have to forgive my stubborn innocence—that these same neighbors can spend Yom Kippur praying for forgiveness for their sins without even noticing that we, the people of Israel, are guilty of terrible crimes against our Palestinian brothers and sisters? Why bother going to the synagogue at all if you are so blind to the suffering of others, if you are living a lie? I know I’ll never understand.

So here we are building together a succat shalom, a Succah of Peace—another resonant phrase from the prayer book—and the police are, of course, here in force together with the Jerusalem municipality’s building inspectors, and they’ve given us notice that what we are doing is illegal and they will destroy the succah as soon as it’s built. You should know that the city is absolutely filled with succot, thousands of them, many of them built (without permits, of course) on sidewalks and other public thoroughfares (in some areas, such as Nahlaot, you can barely negotiate your way along the street), and none of them, it goes without saying, is in danger of being demolished—since they are good Jewish succot, after all, respectable appurtenances of the tribe. But a Palestinian-Israel Peace Succah, that’s clearly another matter. There’s no way the police will let it stand. It’s a public menace. It might disturb for a few moments the proper order of a world in which Palestinians can be ruthlessly driven from their homes, and those who protest against this cruelty will be thrown in jail. It might even make some ordinary person stop and think when he or she reads the inscription on the cloth panel forming one of the succah‘s sides: “The Sheikh Jarrah Succah of Peace.” Who knows what unsettling thoughts this rickety structure of poles and tinsel decorations might engender? Besides, we’re building it right outside the houses the settlers have stolen, and the pious settlers might take offense.

It’s somehow comforting to engage in these doomed, purely symbolic actions; it feels right. The very futility of it all makes it all the better, all the more necessary, even fun; in fact, the more absurd the better. Credo quia absurdum est. And there is the friendship infusing this moment and giving it meaning. We were here ten days ago for a joint ‘Id al-Fitr/Rosh Hashana party, and Mr. Al-Kurd spoke with his usual gracious forbearance, thanking us for standing beside them, and a little Palestinian girl took the microphone and said, “We are tired of the settlers’ stealing our homes and our toys.” I have to confess, though, that today, as the afternoon wears on and the succah is destroyed, not once but twice, I’m also feeling very angry. This has been a tough day. In the early hours of the morning, a security guard employed by the Jewish settlers in Silwan, under the walls of the Old City, shot and killed a 32-year-old Palestinian man, Samir Sirhan, a father of five. I wasn’t there to see it, I don’t know exactly how it happened, but I can say with confidence that if there were no Israeli enclave planted by force in the heart of Palestinian Silwan, with an armed mercenary militia to “protect” it, Samir would probably still be alive. Another two, at least, were wounded (the police have clamped down a news blackout, no one knows for sure how many were hurt). Amiel got there early and was, of course, arrested. (You can be quite sure that nothing will happen to the security guard who shot and killed.) Silwan, meanwhile, has erupted in violent protest. It wouldn’t take much to spark off another Intifada, especially the way things are going, with Netanyahu refusing to renew the “freeze” on building in the settlements. If the talks collapse over this, as they may, or over some other piece of wicked foolishness, another round of violence is all too likely: that was the Chief of Staff’s assessment, as of yesterday. You have to remember, too, that every single housing unit that goes up in the territories is a crime under international law as well as a crime against ordinary human decency and against God, if there is a God.

So our succah is also planned as a Booth of Mourning for Samir, as is customary among Palestinians—another reason, no doubt, for the authorities to attack it. The Sheikh Jarrah protest, perhaps the most hopeful development in the Israeli peace movement in recent years, is closely allied with grass-roots Palestinian protest in Silwan. Three weeks ago we held a medium-size demonstration in Silwan against El’ad, the settler organization that effectively rules the village and that has been given responsibility for the archaeological site there, which they call the City of David, the most sensitive such site in the country (another unthinkable outrage, possible only in Israel).  Every year El’ad runs an archaeological conference and tour in Silwan, open to the public, and we were there to protest. We managed to make ourselves heard, at considerable cost; Daniel, standing right beside me, was brutally battered, kicked, and trampled by the police, without provocation, and taken off, bleeding profusely, his glasses shattered, to jail; Ram was seriously wounded in the foot by a border policeman; several others were also hurt, and eight arrested. I found it more depressing than usual, though in our terms these days the demonstration counts as a success. I had just returned from India, and the renewed encounter with hard-core monotheists was something of a shock.

For the record, and in brief, here is how the Succah comes crashing down. It’s standing there on the sidewalk, miraculously held together by strings and poles, as a Succah should be, and gaudily decorated with paper cut-outs and bright paintings and shiny flowers which we prepared together with the Palestinian children. Looks not bad. Nissim says we should apply to the annual competition for the Most Beautiful Succah prize. It huddles under a large fig tree whose branches spill over the courtyard wall; indeed, the Succah could easily be taken as no more than a slight extension of this beautiful tree. We’re rather proud of it. We stand inside it as the police advance, and of course it’s not very sturdy so within about three minutes it’s been ripped apart, the poles strewn over the street, the palm fronds snapped, the decorations mangled and torn. At just this moment one of the settlers walks into the courtyard of his stolen house carrying a large palm frond for his succah, which, I assure you, no one will demolish; he wishes us a happy holiday. I can also assure you that ours is the only succah to be destroyed by the municipality this year.

Silan is arrested during this short altercation. As soon as it’s over, we start again. This time we forget about the poles on the sidewalk; we will hang the cloth panels down from a few wooden rods resting on the enclosure wall and reaching into the fig tree. There’s even room for a few more decorations. Salah works happily, defiantly, at making this half-succah fit the classical model, more or less, and after half an hour or so it is, indeed, a passable specimen, and even less of an Obstruction to the Public than its noble predecessor. However, it quickly shares the former’s sad fate.

Before the police move in the second time, I take my stand inside this lovable little booth; it’s where I want to be. Hillel is standing beside me; he knows Jewish law inside out, so when I say that I’m afraid that this is not quite a kosher succah—for one thing, you definitely can’t see the sky (to say nothing, in theory, of any stars)– he laughs and at once confirms this thought. Still, I decide that since I’ve helped build it, and I believe deeply in the almost hopeless idea that it embodies, I might as well say the holiday blessing. You’re supposed to utter it sitting down, but there’s nowhere to sit in the Palestinian-Israeli Succah of Peace in its final moments, so I change the formula just a little: “Blessed art Thou, Lord of the Universe, who has commanded us to stand in the Succah.” You know what, maybe He does, after all, exist. Hillel, who knows I’ve been away in India, asks me if I’m back to stay a while, and I say yes and, a little bitterly, quote the old Zionist song: “I’ve come up to the Land to build and be built.”  I wave my arms at our fragile, tacky, quixotic creation. “As you can see,” I say, “so far it’s not going very well.”

Sheikh Jarrah Protestors Defy Censors, ‘Out’ Doron Zahavi

Saturday, July 31st, 2010

I’m grieved that some of my readers today have been telling me they can’t access my site.  My host tells me it’s because the new DNS hasn’t fully propagated itself and that takes up to 48 hours.  But I’m not sure why some readers should have access to the site and then lose it.  I hope over the next 24 hours that these problems will lessen.  But please let me know via the Contact link here, Facebook or private e mail if your access fails.

I wanted to thank all the readers who’ve made donations to defray the added server hosting costs I’ll be incurring due to upgrading my server and security.  I continue to accept such gifts to cover the new $600 per year hosting fee.

Today, Yossi Gurvitz, who I’m going to start calling one of the “Zahavi Three” (to note our mutual victimization by DOS attacks), informed me of something truly wonderful that proves the amazing power of blogs to stir political action.  At last Friday’s weekly Sheikh Jarrah protest, Israeli demonstrators shouted the following:

Doron Zahavi, do not worry, we’ll soon be seeing you at the Hague.

It sounds much better–and rhymes–in Hebrew.  If anyone has any YouTube video of this chant, please let me know. UPDATE: Thanks to reader, Meir for offering the link. The commentary about Zahavi begins at 1:20 into the video.

What all this means is that a confidential source informed me that Captain George, a notorious accused torturer and rapist, is Doron Zahavi.  I published this information along with two other Israeli bloggers.  We were attacked and within days hundreds of demonstrators were defying Israeli censorship and shouting Zahavi’s name to East Jerusalem’s rooftops.  My only regret is that I was half a world away and couldn’t be there to hear those shouts.  But the fact that I am half a world away and played a key role in enabling this is a miracle of technology.  Further, the fact that an American Jewish blogger and Israeli bloggers could unite in this project delights me no end.  While others may have their own definition of Zionism–mine is precisely this.  That the Diaspora and Israel unite in the search for justice in the State of Israel.  And this is why I started this blog seven years ago.  For precisely this type of situation.  This is what blogs, at least good blogs, are for.

Next Year in a Shared Jerusalem!

Sunday, March 28th, 2010

Next year in Jerusalem, capital of Palestine...and Israel (Gerard Horton)

The closing invocation of the traditional seder is l’shana ha-ba’ah b’Yerushalayim (“Next year in Jerusalem”).  It’s sung to a rousing melody and can be quite moving and liberating especially after a long seder narrative.  Barack Obama plans a White House seder tomorrow with his Jewish and African-American staff.  I’d suggest a slogan that most of us can get behind: “Next year in a shared Jerusalem” (…Yerushalayim meshutefet).

Bibi’s seder is going to hear something quite different: “Next year in Sheikh Jarrah, next year in Ramat Shlomo, next year in a rebuilt Temple.”  That tells you all you need to know about the difference between the kind of Jew Bibi is and the kind of Jew I am.

Our ancestors were slaves in Egypt who threw off the yoke of bondage through violent resistance to oppression.  Their resistance earned them liberation, freedom and the right to live as free men and women in their own land.  Their leader was an angry man who himself killed an Egyptian taskmaster, no doubt transforming him into a terrorist in his day in the eyes of the Egyptian Pharoah.  Remind you of anyone?  Not many Israelis are going to be thinking of this as they celebrate Passover seder.  Not many Israelis ever think much about the Palestinians unless they’re forced to do so.  And it’s a shame really.

Back in the day when this blog was young and no one read it, I wrote a long essay, The Life of Moses as an Allegory of Jewish Existence, about the character of Moses and his relationship to contemporary issues of Jewish identity.  It makes good Passover reading.  I’ve also written numerous Passover-themed posts to which I’ve devoted much thought and attention.  You can recollect them in tranquility here.

Reblog this post [with Zemanta]

Will Someone Tell the NY Times What is a ‘Mainstream Israeli?’

Thursday, March 11th, 2010
yossi klein halevi

Why does the NYT call this man 'mainstream?'

In an otherwise fairly balanced article about the growing movement of progressive Israelis against the Sheikh Jarrah evictions, Isabel Kershner writes this astonishingly ill-informed passage:

The case of Sheikh Jarrah also presents a predicament for some mainstream Israelis.

Yossi Klein Halevi, a senior fellow at the Shalem Center, a research institution in West Jerusalem, said he opposed a Jewish “right of return” to properties lost in the 1948 war. But he noted that more and more Arabs were buying apartments in the predominantly Jewish neighborhood where he lives.

“It cannot go one way in Jerusalem,” Mr. Klein Halevi said. “I am deeply torn.”

OK, let’s parse this.  First, you’ll note that Yossi Klein Halevi has become a “mainstream Israeli.”  This despite the fact that earlier in his life he was a leader of the Jewish Defense League, wrote Memoirs of a Jewish Extremist, and currently is a fellow of the Shalem Center, a Likudist think-tank funded by Sheldon Adelson and affiliated with such right-wing ideologues as Natan Sharansky.  Once again, this just shows how hopelessly biased and politically out of touch Times reporters in Israel are.  They are attuned to the group think fed to them by the government and its journalistic acolytes like Halevi.  But they cannot provide a nuanced account of many political issues.  Usually Kershner does better than Ethan Bronner.  But in this passage, she falls prey to his sloppiness.

Note also that the Shalem Center is given the honorific “research institution” without noting its Likudist orientation.

Kershner accepts at face value the preposterous claim advanced by hard-right supporters of the Palestinian evictions that Arabs can live in West Jerusalem and are buying apartments there (which is patently false).  In order to test Halevy’s claim you would have to know where he lives in Jerusalem.  If he lives within the Green Line his claim would be bogus.  If he lives beyond it there is some faint possibility that an Arab might be able to buy an apartment in a predominantly Arab Jerusalem neighborhood.  Overall, I find Halevy’s claim preposterous.

But even more than that, we’re talking about the Israeli government ‘legally’ stealing the property of Sheikh Jarrah Palestinians and replacing them with settlers who have even less claim to the property than the Palestinians.  Even if Halevy’s claim of Arabs buying apartments in Jerusalem were true, they would be BUYING them, not stealing them.  So if Halevy does believe in Israel being a democracy, any Arab should have the right to buy property anywhere in Israel including his neighborhood (in fact, they don’t).  The fact that he uses this supposed phenomenon to justify naked theft of Palestinian homes indicates how weak his attachment is to democracy when it comes to his Arab fellow citizens.

I also find it interesting that unlike most N.Y. Times reporters, Isabel Kershner’s name has no e-mail link so you cannot communicate with her directly through her published report.  It seems to me that this is a deliberate attempt to isolate this particular reporter from any readers who may wish to comment on her work.  Behavior I would expect from the Times’ Israel correspondents who prefer to maintain distance between themselves and readers.

In a separate comment on the Sheikh Jarrah protests, it’s interesting that they have re-energized the long dormant Israeli left.  Israelis liberals like David Grossman and Moshe Halbertal, who haven’t demonstrated on behalf of a Palestinian in years I imagine, are mentioned as supporters of this movement.  I know that some of my fellow progressive bloggers like Jerry Haber, Brant Rosen and Phil Weiss have been documenting the wonderful work done there.  I applaud this too.

The only reason that I’ve held back is that there is a tendency among progressives to read too much into a single political phenomenon.  We all would like to see a viable Israeli left.  But there simply isn’t one and no matter how wonderful the work supporting the Palestinian evictees is, this alone will not revive the left.  There are deep structural problems with the Israeli political system that cannot be fixed without radical change.  And Sheikh Jarrah, while it may lay the groundwork, cannot do it alone.  The left died for a reason and it will not come back to life unless it fixes or vanquishes what killed it in the first place.

Liberals like Halbertal and Grossman have a record of fleeing from solidarity movements with Palestinians at the first opportunity.  So I wonder whether, when they inevitably do, Sheikh Jarrah can maintain its momentum.

Reblog this post [with Zemanta]

Springtime for Goldstein in Sheik Jarrah

Wednesday, March 10th, 2010



Baruch Goldstein's grave: 'He gave his soul for the people of Israel and its Torah--'Of pure heart and clean hands' (Oligopistos)


Those in the know (especially if you remember the original Zero Mostel-Gene Wilder version of The Producers) will remember that lovely musical number, Springtime for Hitler in Germany. Well, it appears Purim has just passed and it’s no joke that it is the anniversary of Baruch Goldstein’s genocidal rampage against Palestinian worshippers at the Cave of the Patriarchs in Hebron. Every year at this time, his radical settler supporters gather at his grave and dance–yes, they dance to celebrate his act of Jewish terror. That’s why its springtime for Goldstein in Sheikh Jarrah (and Hebron–sung to the tune of the original Springtime):

Purim for Goldstein and Judea
Samaria is happy and gay
We’re marching to a faster pace
Look out, here come’s the master race.

Purim for Goldstein and Judea
Winter for Silwan and Sheikh Jarrah
Come on Jews, go into your dance.

Thanks to Andrew Sullivan (h/t to M.J. Rosenberg) for pointing out this Ynet video of Goldstein’s radical followers who celebrate his death in one of the Arab homes they’ve stolen in Sheikh Jarrah. John Keats wrote the immortal lines:

‘Beauty is truth, truth beauty,’ – that is all ye know on earth, and all ye need to know.”

I regret to say that all you need to know about this despicable movement based on Jewish hate is in this video.

Reblog this post [with Zemanta]